Science suggests that as you listen to a podcast or radio show about cooking and you hear the sizzle of the stove as the broadcaster describes adding garlic, the smell center of your brain will light up, activating memories and prior knowledge. You might actually SMELL the food cooking.
- Helps build empathy and impacts social-emotional well-being.
- Models powerful/fluent speaking.
- Supports listening comprehension skills (which are tested on SBAC)
- Helps build vocabulary.
- Builds background knowledge (especially for ELLs or struggling readers)
- Supports the development of reading (see the Simple View of Reading formula)
- Provides models for composition/presentation.
How can I use them?
- There are many short (under 5 minute) podcasts for kids. These might be a great warm-up once a week, with the class working on retelling, identifying key information, or just brainstorming questions about a topic or current event.
- You might use longer podcasts as part of a station rotation to build prior knowledge or provide more first person, non-fiction accounts of events.
- You might use podcasts to appeal to different learning modalities, giving kids the option to listen to sources rather than simply reading all of them.
- You can create IAB-style comprehension questions to help students practice for the listening part of the SBAC test, and discuss the techniques students used during listening. Kids can listen and discuss individually, in small groups, or as a whole class.
- You can use them to model, guide, and have students practice the note-taking skills you teach.
- Have students write (or use flip to record) the connections they make between the current events from the audio to the historical events, general science topic, or other concepts they are learning about.
For links to elementary-age podcasts, check out this resource.
For more research, check out the Cult of Pedagogy blog/podcast about using podcasts.
For more ideas, listen to or view the video podcast from Truth for Teachers.
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